Quick question. I have a XBR6 which has ethernet but the wireless router is in another room. Can I have the S560 on Wifi then use the ethernet port to connect to my XBR6 for Internet Connection Sharing?

With Harmony remote, just include the S360 in your setup (has the "eject" IR). Then use a learning remote laying around the house to transfer to S560 field. I have asked Logitech by e-mail (Sunday) to include the S360 code in the S560 setup. Ergonomically better to have the eject button on the remote. Toss the remote that comes with the S560.

I am also using the Harmony One remote for the 560, but after messing around with it for a while, just found it easier to delete the 560 from the remote profile and load the 360 for the eject option. Is there any known drawback to this approach?

I am also using the Harmony One remote for the 560, but after messing around with it for a while, just found it easier to delete the 560 from the remote profile and load the 360 for the eject option. Is there any known drawback to this approach?

I have not tried it, but if all of the buttons are the same (have the same codes) I do not see why that would not work. Logitech did get back to me indicating that they added the eject code to the S560. The e-mail seemed to suggest that they just did this on my account. They should do this globally.

Being able to download BD-Live content over wireless network (I have found) is a major plus for this player. Finally got DLNA to work today, streaming pictures over the network. Another great use of the unit.

100% with you on this. The trick was downloading and installing Windows Media Player 11 and enabling the media share options. Did this on a desktop and a notebook. Worked great with the photos.

I only wish the 560 would also let me do music and videos the same way, but for now it does not. (maybe with a future software upgrade?)

I already had WMP 11. I had DRM issues with XP that would not allow the S560 to be seen. Found some information on-line that worked. I thought someone here indicated that they had information from someone at Sony that music and video would be enabled with a future firmware update. The hardware is certainly there to allow it.

I don't recall where I read this (I think it was in one of the closed captioning mailing lists) but I seem to remember that (unlike with closed captions) stylistic aspects of subtitles are controlled by the software (i.e., on the BD/DVD), not via the player... indeed (again, if I recall correctly) this was one reason given that some folks who rely on closed captions/subtitles hated subtitles and preferred closed captions.

I don't have a PS3 or know what specific capability you're referring to in that regard, but my guess is that if there is a way for a PS3 to control some stylistic aspect of subtitles, that that is because the PS3 is actually generating them on the fly (programmatically), and dynamically applying them to the (obviously computer-generated) data stream. Just my guess, though, and wholly dependent on the admittedly sketchy memory of technical details of subtitles on video discs, alluded to above.